The brain trust, promoted to high office

This column was written as the final general election results came in, with David Cameron looking set to have secured a majority and five more years in 10 Downing Street.

But what if you were to form a government from academics? Who would be your ideal prime minister? Who could run the Department of Health? Which scholar would be a good fit for the role of Chancellor of the Exchequer?

Meanwhile, Vicky Duckworth (@vicky_duckworth), senior lecturer in further education and training at Edge Hill University, suggested a “new job” as “culture secretary perhaps” for THE’s books editor, Karen Shook (@TimesHigherArts). Ms Shook had a string of suggestions of her own. Nobel laureate economist and Columbia University professor Joseph E. Stiglitz (@JosephEStiglitz) would make an ideal chancellor; the “fearless” Edzard Ernst, physician and emeritus professor at the University of Exeter, would fit right in as health minister; and “surely we need” Joanna Williams (@jowilliams293), programme director for the master’s in higher education and senior lecturer at the University of Kent, as minister for higher education, she said. “Only in my dreams,” replied Dr Williams. “And other people’s nightmares.”

In another light-hearted hashtag, #AcademicNovel, Twitter account and blog Academia Obscura (@AcademiaObscura) asked followers to tweet examples of novel titles that had been tweaked to make reference to academia, putting forward “Fear and Loathing in the Tenure Committee” as a Hunter S. Thompson-inspired opening gambit, and following it up with the raunchy “50 Grades a Day”.

The fun didn’t stop there either. Erin Fisher (@DrErinFisher), professor of psychology at Rock Valley College in Illinois, wanted to read Steinbeck’s “The Grades of Wrath”; PhD candidate Matt (@kocsan) took the conversation back to Dickens with “A Tale of Two Citations”; and April Follies (@aprilfollies) somewhat took the edge off H. G. Wells with the title “War of the Words”.

Some were in less of a jokey mood. “Les Miserables”, tweeted graduate student Emma Barry (@AuthorEmmaBarry). “No title change required.”